This year marks
the twenty-fifth anniversary of a publishing event: Curing World Poverty: The New Role of Property. A “small press bestseller,” the book is even
more relevant today than it was a quarter of a century ago. (The criteria for determining bestseller
status are admittedly flexible, and this was “pre-Amazon” sales, but back in
the day, 3-5,000 was considered a small press bestseller, and Curing World Poverty sold over 5,000
copies without remaindering.)
Thursday, January 31, 2019
Wednesday, January 30, 2019
A Democratic Socialist Responds
A few weeks ago
we got a response to one of our blog postings on democratic socialism from a
(gasp) democratic socialist! Now, that
in and of itself was not unusual. What
really threw us was the fact that this one was actually civil and seemed
honestly to be seeking information. Here’s
what the DS said:
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Fulton Sheen and the Roots of the Problem
As we
saw in the
previous posting on this subject, the three principles of economic justice
(participation, distribution, and social justice) are an essential component of
a just and free society, such as Fulton Sheen reminded people in his 1940 book,
Freedom
Under God.
Monday, January 28, 2019
Just Third Way (Re)Broadcast
Today
we have a special treat in store: a rebroadcast (we don’t do reruns) of Dr.
Norman Kurland’s keynote address (ten minutes) at the “Focus on the Fed Rally”
in 2010. What with the shenanigans that
have been going on with money and credit throughout the world, this message is
as timely as ever:
Friday, January 25, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 04
Things are a little slow getting
back to what people call normal after the New Year, but there are some
significant Just Third Way events happening.
Of particular interest is the fact that 2019 marks the twenty-fifth
anniversary of CESJ’s bestselling (by small press definitions) book, Curing World Poverty: The New Role of
Property. And other happenings are
equally interesting:
Thursday, January 24, 2019
Fulton Sheen and the Principles of Economic Justice
In the
previous posting on this subject, we realized that, while Pope Leo XIII and
other heads of the Catholic Church pretty much laid it down as the law that as
many people as possible should become owners of capital, they did not really
give a good or practicable means of being able to do so. Does that mean that Fulton Sheen made a
mistake in his book, Freedom
Under God, when he backed the papal stance on widespread capital
ownership to the hilt?
Wednesday, January 23, 2019
From Social Christianity to Christian Socialism
One of
the more surprising things people find out when they study history is that what
actually happened, and what most of the experts say happened, are two different
things. Nowhere has this been more of a
problem than when trying to figure out how social Christianity differs from
Christian socialism.
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
The Three Ways of Fulton Sheen
As we
saw in the
previous posting on this subject (the subject being Fulton Sheen’s book, Freedom
Under God), there is a difference between the natural and absolute
right to be an owner (everyone absolutely has the right to be an owner), and
the socially determined and limited rights of ownership (no owner can do
whatever he or she likes, but must not harm others or the common good when
exercising his or her rights).
Monday, January 21, 2019
Just Third Way Podcast
Today
being Martin Luther King Day, we’re having the first podcast of the new season
start off with a few remarks in that vein and then get down to a discussion
from Dr. Norman Kurland about the sort of thing Dr. King was working toward. We're also trying out a new, more standardized format:
Friday, January 18, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 03
Along with all the bad things that
everybody knows about, there are a number of bright things on the horizon. This is understandable, as CESJ co-founder
Father William Ferree, S.M., Ph.D. always said that in social justice terms, nothing
is impossible. No matter how bad things
look, there is always a just and moral way to solve any social problem:
Thursday, January 17, 2019
Fulton Sheen on Human Law v. Natural Law
In yesterday’s posting,
Fulton
Sheen on Private Property, we noted that Fulton Sheen seemed to have
contradicted himself. He noted several
times that private property is a natural right — something inherent in the
human person, which not even the State can take away — and then made the
comment that “though man has a natural right to private property, this right is not absolute.”
(P. 51, Freedom Under God.)
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
Fulton Sheen on Private Property
In yesterday’s
posting we looked at the legal case for the importance of private property. We have to keep in mind,
however, that the title of Fulton
Sheen’s book is “Freedom Under God.” Sheen’s purpose was not to present
a treatise or contract delineating humanity’s legal rights and duties in human society. Our constitutions, bills of
rights, and legal systems are intended to serve that
purpose.
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
Fulton Sheen’s Long Lost Classic
Every once in a
while we review a few things from the past that we think people might want to
take another look at. One of these is
our rediscovery a few years back of a “long lost classic” by none other than
Fulton J. Sheen . . . you know, “Uncle Fulty” who was in a (friendly)
competition with “Uncle Milty”?
Monday, January 14, 2019
Just Third Way Broadcast
Ever
hear of 60 Minutes — the show, not
(necessarily) the time units? Once upon
a time they did a segment on Louis O. Kelso . . . who happened to state his
opinion that unless the economy could be made to work for everyone, we were heading for trouble. And you know something? He was right.
(By the way, don’t be mislead by Kelso’s use of the term “capitalism.” He used it in, e.g., The Capitalist Manifesto
and The New Capitalists,
a different sense than the socialists use it, and later decided it was not the
best term, anyway.)
Friday, January 11, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 02
As politics, economics, and
religion continue to mix (being the same thing to an increasing number of
people), the world picture becomes increasingly confused and confusing . . .
unless you come over and take a walk on the side of common sense. Analyzed from a Just Third Way perspective,
it’s astonishing just how much of what is going on starts to make sense . . .
and the right thing to do becomes more obvious:
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Politics and Religion
According to R.W. Church, possibly the best (if not
completely objective) historian of the Oxford Movement, the whole trouble and
the reason for the ultimate downfall of the Movement and the loss of John Henry
Newman to the Church of England was the result of ego and arrogance on the part
of the Oxford authorities who looked on ancient Christian doctrines as
dangerous novelties,
Wednesday, January 9, 2019
About That “Democratic Socialism” . . .
In today’s world
it is easy to get the impression that the meaning and purpose of life is for
everyone’s needs to be provided by someone else and all desires gratified
without effort on the part of the recipient.
Current thought as reported in the media suggests that a justly
structured social order is one in which matters are arranged in such a way that
as many people as possible can remain permanent children, complete with “safe
spaces” and periodic “time outs” for temper tantrums.
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
We Agree With Alan Greenspan
. . . just not
for the reasons you (or he) might think.
A few days ago, everybody’s favorite (or at least best known) freshman
representative, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, said that the top marginal tax rate
for the “ultra rich” should be raised to 70%.
This would allow the government to fund research into “green” alternative
fuels with the goal of weening the U.S. off the fossil fuels by 2030.
Monday, January 7, 2019
Just Third Way Broadcast
Today
we bring you a video of a discussion between Norman Kurland and Gar Alperovitz
on the democratization of capital ownership.
It’s not very long, but you will find it substantive:
Friday, January 4, 2019
News from the Network, Vol. 12, No. 01
A short work week, but one filled
with one or two significant events . . . one of which is not the increasing
volatility of the stock market. People
have yet to realize that the stock market is NOT a “leading economic indicator.”
It’s not, strictly speaking, an economic
indicator at all. It’s a lagging
emotional indicator. It gives a good
idea of the emotional state of the gamblers on Wall Street, and that’s about
it. As for more significant events:
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Labor, Capital, and Alienation
Many people think
that replacement of human labor by capital and the alienation and social
disintegration that results is a new thing.
It is not. Economic and social
alienation due to advancing technologies or changing economies has been around
since the dawn of time. It is just that
the rate at which change occurs started accelerating about five hundred years
ago. For this, two factors are
responsible.
Wednesday, January 2, 2019
The “Marketplace of Faith”?
There was an
interesting article in last year’s Wall
Street Journal (yes, we’ve been dying to use that line since last week . .
. that is, last year) asking the question, “Why are Americans so religious?” (“The Marketplace of Faith,” 12/28/18, A-10). Sriya Iyer, who wrote the piece, is also the
author of The Economics of Religion in
India (2018). She argues in part
that in America there is more competition between religions and between
religion and the government. With more
choices for basic services, competition — and institutions providing that
competition — will thrive.
Tuesday, January 1, 2019
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